← NewsAll
Venezuela could be the opening act of the 'Donroe Doctrine'.
Summary
The US National Security Strategy includes a proposed 'Trump Corollary' to the Monroe Doctrine, and Venezuelan leader Nicolás Maduro is in US custody after an arraignment with a next court date set for March 17.
Content
The United States' National Security Strategy published last month includes language describing a 'Trump Corollary' to the Monroe Doctrine and outlines using US power to secure regional interests. That policy framing is being discussed alongside the legal case involving Venezuela's leader, Nicolás Maduro, who was transferred to US custody and arraigned in Manhattan on drug-trafficking and related charges. Maduro has denied the charges and identified himself as Venezuela's president during court proceedings. A next court date has been scheduled for March 17.
Known developments:
- The National Security Strategy text states the US will "assert and enforce a 'Trump Corollary' to the Monroe Doctrine" and links military and strategic assets to projected US aims in the hemisphere.
- Nicolás Maduro was brought to the United States, arraigned in federal court in Manhattan, and has publicly disputed the charges against him.
- The federal court set a next hearing date of March 17 and no bail application was recorded at the arraignment.
Summary:
The published strategy and Maduro's transfer are being reported together and have been presented as related developments in coverage of US regional policy. The immediate procedural next step is the March 17 court hearing; broader political and regional consequences are undetermined at this time.
